| Michael Goldhaber on Wed, 26 Apr 2017 15:53:51 +0200 (CEST) |
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| Re: <nettime> Why I won't support the March for Science |
I took part on Saturday in the March for Science in SF. It wast a bit
of d� vu for me, since, about 47 years ago, I helped organize and
participated in the March 4, scientists' movement that became "Science
for the People" (SftP), and then the first Earth Day the next year.
Slightly earlier, in 1968, I was a founder of what eventually became
"SftP". We objected to science being used for war , especially in
Viet-Nam, and not only weapons science but anthropology and medicine as
well, in that context. We opposed a whole range of science for the
corporations, or for racist ends, and so on. Of course these are still
valid and important concerns. But they have little to do with the
origins of the current marches, which are the Trump administration's
strident opposition to non-corprorate-aiding, non-military research
which goes right along with its opposition to the humanities and the
arts as well as public broadcasting.
Of course, on the whole, the organizers of the current event might be
accused of being a bit naive, both as to the likely effects of the
march as well as the purity of science. For some, the primary reasons
for marching are selfish: they want their grants renewed or simply
want to have a job, as well of course, as wanting to be able to carry
out the research projects that interest them. That's no more selfish
though than typical strikers .When they speak in favor of
'evidence-based" efforts they are referring in large measure to
climate science or medicine, where , despite perhaps going a bit too
far, the approach has mostly been beneficial.
As far as the philosophical implications or, perhaps equivalently, the
claims to universality, it's certainly easy for science as well as
philosophers to claim too much. No overarching view is unproblematic.
With climate science for example, absolute certainties are out of the
question. There is only one earth, and in general., at best, scientific
precautions are statistical or probabilistic in nature. One is simply
too small a sample. For the right, that is an entirely fallacious
dodge, but it cannot be logically refuted.
I myself doubt that the marches will change much of anything, though
they may add some esprit de corps. They were hardly covered even in
what should have been the most sympathetic press. But to rail against
them on Nettime strikes me as absurd to the point nearly of idiocy,
being principled about utterly the wrong thing.
Best,
Michael
On Apr 25, 2017, at 12:32 PM, carlo von lynX <lynX@time.to.get.psyced.org> wrote:
I'll try a deconstruction from the perspective of having
"designed" a leaderless political organization...
On 04/23/2017 06:54 PM, Florian Cramer wrote:
1) The central demand of the 'March for Science', "evidence-based
policies and regulations", is toxic and dangerous.
This approach has certainly been abused strategically in
the past, like declaring economics a kind of science. It's
interesting you mention Popper because in my understanding
of Popper I would define politics as the space of possible
choices of action remaining if you remove all the proven
false options.
<...>
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